Of the fetuses that parents choose to leave un-aborted, many could ride the Subway to the Sea when they eventually commute. This is good news for the un-aborted fetuses that will choose not to take the subway, because it means less cars will be in their way.

“The subway would do little to offset the increases in automobile travel predicted over the next 25 years in the county and the Wilshire Boulevard area." More traffic will exist, the Times explains, because more people will exist, thus increasing the demand for cars.

“Fueled by population growth, the miles driven by motorists will rise almost 66% in the county and 26% in the area served by the subway extension.”

The subway, the Los Angeles Times argues, is partly at fault, for not stopping the population from growing.

But the babies are obviously more at fault, for existing.

"...the San Diego Freeway, the Santa Monica Freeway and major streets along the [subway] line will remain heavily congested due to population growth."

The implication of the Los Angeles Times article is clear; the population needs to stop growing.

LA Weekly explains further; "Marsha McLean, mayor pro tem of Santa Clarita, supports mass transit but says her feeling now about the Westside subway is, 'If you're going to have a pot of money, you need to hand it out to all areas who need it — not just one.'"

Gynecologists agree with this logic. "If you're going to have a lot babies, then you need to make sure every family has a lot of babies--not just one."

Thus, it would be better if everyone stopped creating babies, to prevent baby jealousy and traffic jams.

More from LA Weekly; "At a surreal meeting Monday night, 200 mostly Wilshire-area residents crammed together to discuss the possible route where the subway tunnel will be laid, but Metro officials failed to correct residents' widespread misimpression that the subway would dramatically cut [fallopian tubes].'"

Driving in the future would be less awful with a new subway than driving in the future would be without a new subway. This is great news for people who want to keep driving, but who also wish that others would stop driving.

But the subway will not make commuting by car less awful in the future than commuting by car is today, because more people will exist in the future than exist today.

This is why Subway to the Sea proponents say that the only way to increase subway effectiveness is to stop making so many people, who cost billions to raise and are often difficult to please.